The present disclosure relates to methods and systems for use in the fabrication of semiconductor materials such as silicon. More particularly, the present disclosure relates to large grain, multi-crystalline semiconductor ingot formation method and system for producing a high purity semiconductor ingot.
The photovoltaic industry (PV) industry is growing rapidly and is responsible for increasing industrial consumption of silicon being consumed beyond the more traditional integrated circuit (IC) applications. Today, the silicon needs of the solar cell industry are starting to compete with the silicon needs of the IC industry. With present manufacturing technologies, both integrated circuit (IC) and solar cell industries require a refined, purified, silicon feedstock as a starting material.
Materials alternatives for solar cells range from single-crystal, electronic-grade (EG) silicon to relatively dirty, metallurgical-grade (MG) silicon. EG silicon yields solar cells having efficiencies close to the theoretical limit, but at a prohibitive price. On the other hand, MG silicon typically fails to produce working solar cells. Early solar cells using polycrystalline silicon achieved relatively low efficiencies of approximately 6%. In this context, efficiency is a measure of the fraction of the energy incident upon the cell to that collected and converted into electric current. However, there may be other semiconductor materials that could be useful for solar cell fabrication. In practice, however, nearly 90% of commercial solar cells are made of crystalline silicon.
Today's commercially available solar cells may achieve efficiencies near 24%. However, these solar cells require high purity materials and improved processing techniques. These engineering advances have helped the industry approach the theoretical limit for single junction silicon solar cell efficiencies of 31%. Still, known processes demand the very highest purity silicon feedstock.
Because of the high cost and complex processing requirements of obtaining and using highly pure silicon feedstock and the competing demand from the IC industry, silicon needs usable for solar cells are not likely to be satisfied by either EG, MG, or other silicon producers using known processing techniques. As long as this unsatisfactory situation persists, economical solar cells for large-scale electrical energy production may not be attainable.
Accordingly, a need exists for a source of silicon ingots to meet the silicon needs of the solar cell industry, which source may not compete with the demands of the IC industry.
Several factors determine the quality of raw silicon material that may be useful for solar cell fabrication. One particularly important aspect of raw silicon material is the size of the silicon grains in a multicrystalline material. In supplying the needed multicrystalline silicon ingots for use in forming multicrystalline silicon wafers usable in solar cells, it is desired that the crystal grain sizes be as large as possible. Large grain size enhances the electrical properties of the later manufactured solar cells, made by this material. A need exists, therefore, for providing multicrystalline silicon ingots that may ultimately form commercially available solar cells with large grain sizes and resulting efficiencies that may be presently achievable using expensive higher purity materials and/or costly processing techniques.
Techniques are here disclosed for providing a combination of interrelated steps at the ingot formation level for ultimately making economically viable the fabrication of solar cells on a mass production level. The present disclosure includes a method and system for forming multicrystalline silicon ingots, which ingots include large grain sizes. With the disclosed process and system silicon ingots may formed directly within a silicon melt crucible. The disclosed process forms a large-grain multi-crystalline ingot from molten silicon by precisely controlling local crystallization temperatures throughout a process crucible. The process operates on the molten silicon and uses the driving force inherent to the transition from the liquid state to the solid state as the force which drives the grain growth process. For example, using multicrystalline silicon ingots formed from the processes here disclosed, solar wafers and solar cells, based on this multicrystalline material, with improved performance/cost ratio are practical. In addition, the present disclosure may readily and efficiently combine with metal-related defect engineering at the wafer level to yield a highly efficient PV solar cell.
According to one aspect of the disclosed subject matter, a semiconductor ingot forming method and associated system are provided for large grain, multi-crystalline semiconductor ingot formation. The disclosed method and system include forming a silicon melt in an especially shaped crucible (e.g., a reverse pyramid or reverse conus). The crucible allows locally controlling thermal gradients within the silicon melt. Using these especially shaped crucibles in combination with a corresponding temperature field/profile and temperature gradient the number of seeds for heterogeneous nucleation can be minimized and localized in desired area. The local control of thermal gradients preferentially forms silicon crystal grains that are large in size and small in number in the beginning of solidification occurs in predetermined regions within the silicon melt by locally reducing temperatures in the predetermined regions. The process continues the thermal gradient control and the rate control step to form a multicrystalline silicon ingot having reduced numbers of grains for a given volume of the silicon ingot.
These and other advantages of the disclosed subject matter, as well as additional novel features, will be apparent from the description provided herein. The intent of this summary is not to be a comprehensive description of the claimed subject matter, but rather to provide a short overview of some of the subject matter's functionality. Other systems, methods, features and advantages here provided will become apparent to one with skill in the art upon examination of the following FIGUREs and detailed description. It is intended that all such additional systems, methods, features and advantages be included within this description, be within the scope of the accompanying claims.
The features, nature, and advantages of the disclosed subject matter may become more apparent from the detailed description set forth below when taken in conjunction with the drawings in which like reference characters identify correspondingly throughout and wherein:
The method and system of the present disclosure provide a semiconductor ingot formation process for producing a large-grained, multi-crystalline semiconductor (e.g., silicon) ingot. As a result of using the disclosed subject matter, an improvement in the properties of low-grade semiconductor materials, such as upgraded metallurgical grade silicon (UMG) occurs. Such improvement allows use of UMG silicon, for example, in producing solar cells as may be used in solar power generation and related uses. The method and system of the present disclosure, moreover, particularly benefits the formation of semiconductor solar cells using UMG or other non-electronic grade semiconductor materials, but can be used for electronic grade material too. The present disclosure may allow the formation of solar cells in greater quantities and in a greater number of fabrication facilities than has heretofore been possible.
Among various technical advantages and achievements herein described, certain ones of particular note include the ability to reduce the adverse effects of small grain size, multi-crystalline silicon ingots, which exhibit less than desirable electron carrier lifetimes when such silicon may be used for solar cells.
To distinguish the present disclosure from known semiconductor ingot formation process,
The CZ process to grow single crystal silicon, therefore, involves melting the silicon in crucible 13, and then inserting seed crystal 16 on puller rod 20, which continuously rotates upon being slowly removed from melt 12. If the temperature gradient 24 of melt 12 is adjusted so that the melting/freezing temperature is just at seed-melt interface 26, a continuous single crystal silicon ingot 18 grows as puller rod 20 moves upward.
The entire apparatus must be enclosed in an argon or helium atmosphere to prevent oxygen from getting into either melt 12 or silicon ingot 18. Puller rod 20 and crucible 14 are rotated in opposite directions to minimize the effects of convection in the melt. The pull-rate, the rotation rate and temperature gradient 24 must all be carefully optimized for a particular wafer diameter and growth direction.
Water-cooled, induction or resistivity-heated, processing environment 30 provides a sealed growth chamber having a vacuum of, for example, below 1×10−3 Torr and cycle purged with argon or helium to 10 psig several times to expel any oxygen or other gases remaining in the chamber. Heating zones 36, 38, and 40 may be heated by a multi-turn induction coil in a parallel circuit with a tuning capacitor bank, but may consist of resistivity heating elements instead of the induction coils.
Now, the disclosed multicrystalline semiconductor ingot processing environment 30 further includes argon or helium cooling gas system 56, which in the embodiment of
Crucible 34 has a particularly unique shape (reverse pyramid or reverse conus) and the arrangement of heating elements 36, 38, and 40, together with gas cooling pipes 56, allow lowering the rate of heterogeneous nucleation starting from the tip of the bottom of the crucible. In one embodiment, crucible 34 assumes a reverse pyramid shape. Another embodiment exhibits a reverse conus. Irrespective of the particular shape, the present disclosure provides a crucible of a shape that allows for the formation of a process control region wherein temperature control may be localized and silicon crystallization may initially occur.
Process environment 30, therefore, enables production of a multi-crystalline silicon ingot with a low number of large grains, even without the use of a Si seed crystal. Within process environment 30, silicon melt 32 may be cooled-beginning from the center of the bottom of the crucible 34 using an argon or helium gas flow in cooling gas system 56 operating in conjunction with heating elements 40.
In addition to heating elements 36 and 38, more precise silicon melt 32 and solidification process control is possible through the coordinated operation of heating and cooling element 40, cooling gas system 56 and crucible 34 shape. In particular, heating and cooling element 40 may include an innermost set of heaters 70, a middle set of heaters 72, and an outermost set of heaters 74. Cooling gas system 56 may include innermost cooling gas segments 76, 78, 80, 82, 84 and 86, arranged as concentric rings in case of a reverse conus shaped crucible (see
Different crucible 34 shapes are possible as well as heating element arrangements, all within the scope of the present disclosure. For example, in case of a quadratic shape of the base of the crucible 34, cooling gas system 56 may have a quadratic shape. Thus, considerations for the arrangement of heating elements and associated cooling gas systems may be determined according to the optimal effects on crystallization of silicon melt 32, starting from the center of the bottom of the unique shaped crucible 34.
In furtherance of the various objectives
In process environment 110, argon or helium pipe 140 provides the desired cooling gas for local thermal gradient control to allow, that solidification starts in the center of the bottom of crucible 112. The embodiment 110 allows a non-recurring or repeated zone melting process, starting from bottom to top. However, as with the process environment 30 of
As with the above-described process environments, process environment 150 may include a set of lower heating elements 162. Lower heating elements 162 may include individually controllable heaters 164 through 174 for managing temperatures, mixing and solidification of silicon melt 32, while accommodating the various control features and concerns relating to the non-symmetrical nature of modified crucible 152. Embodiment 150 may include upper heating elements as shown in
For a more clear view of modified 152,
The present disclosure, therefore, provides a multi-crystalline silicon ingot with a preferably low number of big grains. Using the presently disclosed fabrication system, silicon melt 32 may be cooled-beginning from the center of crucible 34—using an Argon or helium flow and the programmably controlled heating elements 40. This translates the thermal gradient which is generated by sideways arranged heating element 38 and top heating element 36. In case of a cylindrical crucible 34 the heating zones can be arranged as concentric rings whereby in the schematic drawings a particular color corresponds with a particular temperature. This arrangement can be aligned to the angle of the reversed conus shaped bottom of the crucible as shown in
In case of a quadratic crucible such as crucible 152 of
Additionally the construction in
In case of a cylindrical crucible the heating zones are concentric rings whereby in the schematic drawings a particular color corresponds with a particular temperature. In case of a quadratic crucible the heating zones accordingly have a quadratic shape. Different crucible shapes are possible as well as heater arrangements. Furthermore one has to consider the growth of single crystals.
The processing features and functions described herein provide for large grain, multi-crystalline semiconductor ingot formation. Although various embodiments which incorporate the teachings of the present disclosure have been shown and described in detail herein, those skilled in the art may readily devise many other varied embodiments that still incorporate these teachings. The foregoing description of the preferred embodiments, therefore, is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the claimed subject matter. Various modifications to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without the use of the innovative faculty. Thus, the claimed subject matter is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein.